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The title says it all. This is a serious question.
Read or skim over the material prior to the lecture.
take notes.
Read or skim over the material prior to the lecture.
Read or skim over the material prior to the lecture.
Asking questions and participating will help you retain the lecture too.
BUT don't be "THAT KID" who thinks lecture=his/her personal office hours.
Write down questions for office hours or try to think ahead like when a prof asks a rhetorical question, instead of glazing over, try to actually think up the answer and THINK about what is being said.
I didn't mean questions specific to the lecture, but if your professor is cool with intelligent, thought provoking questions, you and the professor will get more out of lecture... questions that use the lecture material but then take it further. My classes weren't very big either, so I knew my faculty fairly well.
smaller classes are usually ok. I go to a big school and it's so annoying because there's always that pre-med kid who asks a million questions that only barely link to lecture or they don't get something and have to have it resolved right that moment at the expense of the rest of the class.
Read or skim over the material prior to the lecture.
Don't pay much attention and just read the textbook. (I do this when my professor can't teach if someone held him/her at gunpoint.)
Paying some attention every now and then is crucial because not everything on the test will be solely in the textbook.
I find that massive repetition and elimination of "harmful stimuli" such as MyFace, SpaceBook, chatting services, texting, Google, TV, and sometimes SDN helps... A lot.
Happy studying 🙂
osmosis
Sigh, if only studying worked like that. I could just sleep with textbooks under my pillow and I'd wake up brilliant. Too bad =(
As for the lecture thing, I find bringing my laptop is the worst thing I can do. Some people say they can't write fast enough, or that they like to type directly into the powerpoint slides, or they want to save paper and not print notes...but if I have my laptop, I will inevitably be on MSN, Facebook, reddit...and not paying attention. And when you take notes, try to write things down in your own words. I find that it helps me understand immediately and also later when I'm looking back at my notes.
No offense, but I think this is really bad advice, especially since profs usually post their slides online. Copying down slides verbatim will not help you much at all. I find that doing this actually distracts me from listening to things that may be of more value. Only take down things that are repeatedly stressed, and you think are important.Even if there are powerpoints or lectures for class I still take my own notes. I found that my best memorization tool is to write write write because you will write it how it makes sense to you.
I would also suggest staying awake in lecture lol.
take notes.
Try listening. 🙄
👍Who the hell goes to class?
The title says it all. This is a serious question.
Arriving early is one of the most important factors. By arriving early, you can..
1)Prepare the stuff you need for the class. You can pull out your textbook, pencil case, calculator or etc... In this way, you are prepared before the class begins. It feels good when you are all set to go.
2)Talk to your friends. Strike conversations. I have found out that you perform better and feel you want to come to the class if you know the people in the class. Come early to your classes everyday. Talk to your friends or talk to someone you don't know. It feels good when somebody simply asks you "how are you today." People will talk you back if you talk to them first.
3)Ask questions to your professor. Most of the college professors arrive at their classes early. If you are early too, you get to ask questions.
4)Good impression. People like those who show up early.
If you arrive at your classes early everyday, it can really make a difference.
My god. You're like straight out of a Disney special. God bless. Don't let the world change you.
Lol, so you're the kid that sits in the front row of gen chem 2 and writes three pages of notes before class even starts. Good to know.Arriving early is one of the most important factors. By arriving early, you can..
1)Prepare the stuff you need for the class. You can pull out your textbook, pencil case, calculator or etc... In this way, you are prepared before the class begins. It feels good when you are all set to go.
2)Talk to your friends. Strike conversations. I have found out that you perform better and feel you want to come to the class if you know the people in the class. Come early to your classes everyday. Talk to your friends or talk to someone you don't know. It feels good when somebody simply asks you "how are you today." People will talk you back if you talk to them first.
3)Ask questions to your professor. Most of the college professors arrive at their classes early. If you are early too, you get to ask questions.
4)Good impression. People like those who show up early.
If you arrive at your classes early everyday, it can really make a difference.
No offense, but I think this is really bad advice, especially since profs usually post their slides online. Copying down slides verbatim will not help you much at all. I find that doing this actually distracts me from listening to things that may be of more value. Only take down things that are repeatedly stressed, and you think are important.
I repeat in my head what the prof is saying in class.
Word for word.
The only classes I absolutely go to are the ones where they have mandatory attendance (ie. iClickers
ugh. I want to kick in the nuts the guy who invented those iclickers.